AKRON, Ohio ― It was bound to happen ― you’ve found your first gray hair. It may remind you that the internal clock is ticking. You make a mental note to call the hairdresser for a dye job.

Or do you?

Silver or gray is trending now in fashion, accessories and home decor. And while some local stylists say going gray naturally may be a trend, others say it can make a woman look 10 years older.

Before you squeeze that tube of Vidal Sassoon on your locks, examine your shade of gray.

“I have one client with gorgeous white and silver natural hair that I wouldn’t color if she asked me,” said Jackie Parker, owner of J. Parker & Associates in Green, Ohio. “Most gray hair, though, is not pretty.”

Another exception is former Akron, Ohio, TV anchor and personality Robin Swoboda, who recently embraced the gray.

Michelle Touve-Holland, 34, laughs with her stylist Katie Guinan as she gets her hair cut at Gavin Scott Salon and Spa in Stow, Ohio, on April 10. (Akron Beacon Journal/MCT)

Looking at a recent picture of Swoboda on Facebook, Parker, who has been a hairstylist for 35 years, described her hair as an “uncommon, natural, beautiful color.”

“I talked about it (going gray) for years,” Swoboda said. “I was going to a fabulous salon and the owner just kept saying, ‘No, you are not ... you will look like you are 80 years old.’”

But while her late mother was living with her last year, Swoboda noticed how her shiny white and silver hair made her eyes sparkle, and decided it was time to make a change.

Letting gray grow out is a long process, explained Tim Pestian, a stylist at Georgie Salon & Spa in Fairlawn, Ohio. “It’s a journey, that’s for sure,” he said.

“On the occasion of my 55th birthday, right after Christmas, I knew that the only way to get all of the blonde out was to cut it short,” Swoboda said. “While I was sitting there, I thought I looked like James Traficant and asked myself, ‘What have I done? I’ve lost both my length and my blond.’”

Both Parker and Warner understand why clients are interested in at least exploring their gray roots.

“It is freeing, less maintenance and a more simple lifestyle. It goes along with everything we are doing now,” said Parker. “But unless they are one of the rare women with that silver and white mix, I tell them ‘If you want to look 10 years older, then stop coloring your hair.’”

“You can’t convince me that it’s a good thing to go gray ― unless you are old. When you are in your 80s and you have pretty white hair, that’s one thing.

“I think gray hair makes men look older, but they can pull it off,” she said. “It looks more distinguished. But that’s a different story.”

As adults we shake our heads at those crazy kids with purple, pink or orange manes, but remember blue-haired ladies? The women, you might remember, were generally elderly with locks the color of a drop-in toilet freshener. And, no, it wasn’t a mistake. They made their hair that color on purpose.

“That was way back in the day when everybody used a rinse that made their hair blue,” Carris said, laughing.

Maybe going naturally gray isn’t so bad. Still, the majority of women, like Lorraine Fields of Uniontown, Ohio, are on a mission to keep it covered up.

When she recently turned 60, Fields said, streaks of gray sprouted near her ears ― reminding her of “Frankenstein’s bride.”

The hunt for camouflage was on, but it had to be cheap. She perused the aisles of a drugstore for a product with appropriate coverage, and enlisted her husband to help her color her locks.

“Wow, what a dye job. ... Because of my cheapness, I had a brown side of hair, the other almost black, and a chemically burned scalp. The gray streaks (were) unscathed by the attempt to cover,” she joked, adding that she is heading to a salon to get the job done right.

The thing to remember is that age is just a number, and hair color does not dictate whether you lead a sedate lifestyle or behave like a character in the “50 Shades of Grey.” The choice is yours.